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ARISTOCRATIC LIBERALISM IN
POST-REVOLUTIONARY FRANCE*
ANNEL I EN DE D I J N
University of Leuven
A B S T R ACT. This article investigates the nature and prevalence of aristocratic liberalism in post-
revolutionary France. Defenders of the aristocracy, it argues, departed from a specific conception of liberty,
which can be distinguished both from a purely negative definition of liberty as the ability to do what
one wanted to do, and from a republican conception of liberty as something that could be guaranteed through
self-government alone. To legitimate the role of the aristocracy in post-revolutionary France, publicists and
politicians developed a conception of liberty as a condition that could be guaranteed only through the existence
of ‘ intermediary powers ’ between the central government and the people. Although this conception of liberty
was severely criticized by Restoration liberals such as Benjamin Constant, it had a considerable impact
on the debate about the best way to safeguard liberty in nineteenth-century France, as appears from texts
by important political thinkers such as Tocqueville and Dupont-White.
I
In 1830, the July Revolution, in the name of liberty, brought an end to the
Restoration monarchy. In response to the frequent invocations of this concept
by the revolutionary leadership, A. Creuze de Lesser, a former prefect and a
staunch counter-revolutionary, published a treatise entitled De la liberte, in which
he attempted to clarify the term. Creuze de Lesser defined liberty as ‘ the right
to do what one wanted and what did not harm others ’.1 Liberty in this sense,
‘civil ’ or ‘ individual ’ liberty, he argued, had often been confused with popular
sovereignty, or ‘political ’ liberty. Creuze de Lesser believed that such confusion
was dangerous. Political liberty was not just different from civil liberty, it was
often positively harmful to individual freedom. With an endless range of historical
examples, De la liberte showed that so-called free peoples, such as the Spartans or
the Romans, had really suffered from the most oppressive regimes with respect
to their civil liberty. Conversely, regimes in which the nation had been unfree
had often guaranteed a high degree of civil liberty. To Creuze de Lesser, the
* The author wishes to thank the F.W.O.-Vlaanderen for their generous funding of this project.
Verbiestlaan 10, 3001 Heverlee, Belgium Annelien.DeDijn@arts.kuleuven.ac.be
1 A. Creuze de Lesser, De la liberte (Paris, 1832), p. 1.
The Historical Journal, 48, 3 (2005), pp. 661–681 f 2005 Cambridge University Press
doi:10.1017/S0018246X05004619 Printed in the United Kingdom
661
history of the French Revolution served as a good example of this assertion.
While, during the Revolution, liberty was constantly invoked, the individual
Frenchman had remained a slave. Under Napoleon’s regime, however, in
which public liberty had been usurped, order-loving citizens had enjoyed great
individual liberty. Creuze de Lesser advocated, in other words, an essentially
negative conception of liberty, distinct from and even antithetical to the repub-
lican self-government propagated as the only foundation for liberty during the
more radical phases of the Revolution.2
However, this was not the only, nor, indeed, the most generally accepted
conception of liberty to be used in the post-revolutionary political debate in
France.3 During the Restoration period, the famous liberal thinker Benjamin
Constant had emphasized that political liberty, even if it differed from civil
liberty, was a necessary precondition for individual freedom. He made this clear
in his famous text De la liberte des anciens comparee a celle des modernes (1820).4
Like Creuze de Lesser, Constant started out by arguing that liberty, as under-
stood by the moderns, had to be distinguished from ‘ancient ’ liberty, the exercise
of self-government. ‘We can no longer enjoy the liberty of the ancients, which
consisted in an active and constant participation in collective power’, Constant
famously wrote, ‘Our freedom must consist of peaceful enjoyment and private
independence. ’5
Nevertheless, Constant was firmly convinced that such modern or civil liberty
could not exist without a measure of ancient or political liberty. ‘My observations
do not in the least tend to diminish the value of political liberty ’, he emphasized.
‘ Individual liberty, I repeat, is the true modern liberty. Political liberty is its
guarantee, consequently political liberty is indispensable. ’6 Thus, the represen-
tative system, which he defined as self-government by proxy, was indispensable
for the preservation of civil liberty. But Constant did not stop there. He believed
that even more was required of modern citizens to insure a stable liberal system.
Only with an ‘active and constant surveillance over their representatives ’ could
liberty be preserved.7 From this perspective, the trait most characteristic for
2 Quentin Skinner provides an illuminating discussion of the republican conception of liberty in his
Liberty before liberalism (Cambridge, 1998) ; on the conception of liberty in the French Revolution, see
Gerd van den Heuvel, Der Freiheitsbegriff der Franzosischen Revolution: Studien zur Revolutionsideologie
(Gottingen, 1988).3 I disagree on this point with Gerd van den Heuvel ; see his discussion of the concept ‘Liberte ’
in Rolf Reichardt and Hans-Jurgen Lusebrink, eds., Handbuch politisch-sozialer Grundbegriffe in
Frankreich 1680–1820, XVI (Munich, 1996), pp. 85–121.4 Constant’s text was first published in 1820 in volume VII of his Collection complete des ouvrages, publies
sur le gouvernement representatif et la Constitution actuelle de la France, formant une espece de Cours de politique
constitutionelle (8 vols., Paris, 1818–20). I have used the English translation by Biancamaria Fontana in
Constant’s Political writings (Cambridge, 1988). ‘Liberal ’ will be used here to denote the political
fraction that designated itself as such in post-revolutionary France; ‘ liberalism’ refers to the variety
of political traditions that have preservation of liberty as their most important goal. Note that all
translations in the text are my own unless otherwise indicated. 5 Constant, Political writings, p. 316.6 Ibid., p. 323. 7 Ibid., p. 326.
662 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
modern citizens – their passivity – was also the most dangerous for modern
liberty. This led Constant to a surprisingly republican conclusion. Even modern
citizens, he emphasized at the end of De la liberte des anciens, should be encouraged
to feel involved in the res publica. The institutions of post-revolutionary France
should not just bring peace to the people, they should achieve as well ‘ the
moral education of the citizens ’.8
As a juxtaposition of Creuze de Lesser’s and Constant’s reflections shows,
liberty was a contested concept in post-revolutionary France. But the debate
about the meaning of this concept cannot be limited to an opposition between
defenders of negative liberty and advocates of ‘political ’ liberty. Another, third,
conception of liberty was propagated during the Restoration period by the
so-called royalists, Constant’s most important political opponents. Firm adherents
of the restored Bourbon dynasty, as their name indicates, royalists were no
less committed to the defence of the aristocracy – the liberal journal La Minerve
francaise described them, not without reason, as the ‘aristocratic party ’.9 In this
capacity, royalists propagated a conception of liberty that differed from both
Constant’s and Creuze de Lesser’s.
Unlike Constant, royalist publicists and political thinkers did not believe
that self-government, or even political participation in a more limited sense, was
a necessary precondition for liberty. Neither did the aristocratic party believe,
disagreeing in this respect with Creuze de Lesser, that liberty was a purely
negative concept, a condition independent from any political guarantee. Instead,
they argued that liberty depended on the existence of an aristocracy, a class of
powerful, influential, and wealthy citizens, which could function as an ‘ inter-
mediary power ’ – a notion they borrowed from Montesquieu’s Esprit des lois –
between the people and the government. Such an intermediary power was
necessary, royalists believed, to check the abuse of power by the central govern-
ment. At the same time, the existence of a strong aristocracy also fortified
the government, thus preserving the state from degenerating into anarchy and
despotism. To the aristocratic party, the lack of public spirit evinced by modern
citizens was therefore not a threat to liberty. Rather, they were concerned about
another trait of modern society : its levelled, ‘democratic ’ social condition. While
Constant had preached a moral re-education, the royalists propagated the
necessity of social reform. Only the recreation of a strong aristocracy would
make the French monarchy safe from despotism, they believed.
It is important not to confuse this aristocratic liberalism with traditionalism,
with a defence of ancient noble rights and privileges. Royalists justified the role
8 Ibid., p. 328. This ‘republican’ reading of Constant is based on Stephen Holmes’s interpretation
of Constant’s argument, see Benjamin Constant and the making of modern liberty (New Haven, 1984),
pp. 28–52. A similar reading is provided by Lucien Jaume, ‘Coppet, creuset du liberalisme comme
‘‘culture morale ’’ ’, in: idem, ed., Coppet, creuset de l’esprit liberal : les idees politiques et constitutionnelles du
groupe de Madame de Stael : Colloque de Coppet, 15 et 16 mai 1998 (Paris, 2000), pp. 225–39.9 P.-F. T., ‘Quelques reflexions sur la situation actuelle des choses’, La Minerve francaise, 2 (1818),
pp. 568–74.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 663
of the aristocracy on grounds of general utility, not with reference to the past.
Indeed, far from being traditionalist, aristocratic liberalism, as propagated by
the post-revolutionary royalists, can be seen as an attempt to provide a solution
for one of the most vexing problems of modern political thought : how to safe-
guard liberty in a world where public virtue had disappeared, where citizens
were more interested in their private interests than in the public good? In a sense,
it can even be argued that the theory of the intermediary powers provided the
royalists with a solution to this problem that was more modern than Constant’s.
Unlike that famous liberal thinker, royalists propagated a way to preserve liberty
that did not necessitate an appeal to a public spirit at all.
In the existing literature, this third, aristocratic conception of liberty has been
largely ignored.10 Nevertheless, its investigation is of considerable importance
for the study of post-revolutionary political thought. By showing the predomi-
nance of aristocratic liberalism in the royalists’ discourse – the main goal of this
article – it becomes possible to argue that the royalists were not the mindless
reactionaries they are often made out to be.11 But aristocratic liberalism merits
closer investigation for other reasons as well. The political thought of Restoration
liberals, I will argue, becomes more understandable when it is seen as a response
to the royalists’ pro-aristocratic arguments. Furthermore, it is possible to argue
that aristocratic liberalism continued to have an important influence on nine-
teenth-century French liberalism long after the demise of the royalist party in
1830. For this reason, an investigation of the royalists’ defence of the aristocracy
is important not just to gain a better understanding of the royalist mindset, but
of nineteenth-century political thought in general.
I I
Although Rene de Chateaubriand is known today primarily as the prophet
of Romanticism, he was equally famous during the Restoration period as one of
the royalists’ leading politicians and theorists.12 In this capacity, Chateaubriand
published in 1819 a programmatic article in the royalist journal Le Conservateur,
entitled ‘Politique’,13 in which he contrasted the ideology of the royalists with
that of their political opponents, the ‘revolutionaries ’ or liberals.
10 A notable exception is G. A. Kelly, ‘Liberalism and aristocracy in the French Restoration’,
Journal of the History of Ideas, 26 (1965), pp. 509–30. However, not all of Kelly’s examples are equally
convincing – he describes Constant, for instance, as an advocate of aristocratic liberalism. Moreover,
Kelly does not mention one single royalist thinker, although they were the most vocal defenders of
aristocratic liberalism during the Restoration period.11 Royalists are described as reactionaries in J. J. Oechselin, Le mouvement ultra-royaliste sous la
Restauration (Paris, 1960), pp. 202–3; Jean-Christian Petitfils, ‘Posterite de la contre-revolution’, in Jean
Tulard and Benoit Yvert, eds., La contre-revolution (Paris, 1990) ; Rene Remond, La droite en France de 1815
a nos jours : continuite et diversite d’une tradition politique (Paris, 1954), pp. 16–35.12 On Chateaubriand as a royalist political thinker: Paul Benichou, Jean-Paul Clement, and
Gabriel de Broglie, eds., Chateaubriand visionnaire (Paris, 2001).13 Rene de Chateaubriand, ‘Politique’, Le Conservateur : le roi, la charte et les honnetes gens, 4 (1819),
pp. 353–76.
664 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
According to Chateaubriand, liberty and equality – the two principles most
often invoked by the liberals – were inherently incompatible. Far from being
the natural counterpart of liberty, equality was ‘ the greatest obstacle to the
establishment of constitutional government ’, because ‘absolute equality accom-
modates itself easily to despotism that levels everything, but is not compatible
with a monarchy that establishes a distinction of powers ’. Equality was, in other
words, a ‘natural principle of democracy and despotism’.14 Chateaubriand
illustrated this by referring to the French Revolution : the goal of that Revolution
had been equality, and liberty had suffered in consequence. Driven by a violent
hatred for the clergy and for the nobility, as for all social superiority, the
revolutionaries had subdivided landed property, which had led first to an
anarchic democracy and then to the imperial despotism. By continuing to
propagate equality, Chateaubriand wrote, Restoration liberals opened the door
to a recurrence of that cycle. Royalists, on the contrary, opposed both arbitrary
government and democratic equality. While ‘detesting arbitrariness ’, they had
a ‘hatred of democratic equality ’, a ‘penchant for social hierarchy’, and a ‘pro-
nounced desire to see large property increase ’, which alone could give ‘defenders
to king and people alike’.15
In Chateaubriand’s view, in other words, the royalists’ political programme –
the re-creation of social hierarchy – was essentially a liberal programme. The
restoration of a nobility was necessary to create a political system in France
that would guarantee both freedom and stability. This view was shared by
many other royalist publicists. Pamphlets and political journals of the Restoration
period illustrate the royalists’ concern with the levelled condition of French
society, which was, according to royalist thinkers, the result of various historical
factors, such as the rise of commerce, the development of royal absolutism,
and the outbreak of the French Revolution. In the view of many royalists, this
condition posed a major threat to the preservation of liberty and stability in
post-revolutionary France. To restore social hierarchy, a noble elite was therefore
an urgent necessity. This idea returned in royalist contributions to various
political debates between 1814 and 1830.
The debate about the electoral system provides us with a first example. Liberals
and royalists bickered about the electoral system – who should be qualified to
vote? was the Chamber of Deputies to be renewed partially or in toto? – for most
of the Restoration period. At the end of the Restoration, however, the debate
became particularly acrimonious as the liberals became ever more successful at
the polls, threatening to put the royalists in a permanent minority. In response
to this problem, many royalist publicists propagated a substantial reform of
the electoral system. Charles Cottu, a lawyer at the Royal Court in Paris, was
probably the most radical of those. Although Cottu was originally seen as a
liberal publicist, he turned into an active supporter of the royalist party in the
course of the Restoration period. Between 1828 and 1830, he published a series
14 Ibid. 15 Ibid.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 665
of brochures advocating a complex electoral system in which a fixed number of
hereditary electors were to elect the majority of the deputies. Cottu’s explicit goal
was to turn the electorate into an aristocratic body. He even wanted to give titles
to those hereditary electors : they should be chevaliers or barons, peers, dukes,
marquises, or counts.16
In Cottu’s view, the changes he proposed to the electoral system were
necessary both to protect the monarchy and to preserve liberty in France. He
believed that the political instability in France could be explained by the fact that
the Chamber of Deputies, the most powerful institution in France, was in the
hands of the small property-holders, the proven enemies of the monarchy. To
allow for the continued existence of the monarchy, the government was obliged
to revert to electoral corruption and to seek the support of the ‘clerical ’ party – a
solution that could count on little sympathy from the gallican Cottu. Eventually,
this situation would provoke a war between the bourgeoisie and the throne, and
so liberty would be lost, all through the fault of the electoral law. The electoral
law was therefore ‘anti-social ’, and the cause of ‘anarchy ’. Eventually, it would
lead to despotism. ‘ It will deliver us to the yoke of the clergy, or it will return us
to the bloody despotism of another soldier. ’17
To escape from this predicament, the monarchy needed to create a new
electorate, that would be composed of a hereditary body of proprietors devoted
to the constitutional monarchy. The existence of such a ‘national aristocracy’,
Cottu claimed, was in the interest of the people as well as of the crown. It would
reassure the monarch, ‘ justly concerned by the spirit of revolt which dominates
in the middle classes of society ’, and reaffirm ‘the public liberties menaced
by the desperation of the monarch’.18 Liberty did not imply that the citizens
were liberated from all ‘political superiorities ’. On the contrary, ‘a levelled
people is an enslaved people’. A nation could resist ‘despotism’ alone when
it could unite itself around ‘a great body, or a great illustration that gives it
the support of an influence long respected’.19 Thus, Cottu concluded, his system
was liberal, although ‘not in the sense now accepted’.20 Cottu emphasized
that these views were supported by Montesquieu’s authority. That great writer
had recognized, ‘by the sole power of his genius ’, how necessary it was to
confer an important political role to the aristocracy.21
It is interesting to note that Cottu referred to the English example to legitimate
these proposals for reform. Traditionally, English liberty was attributed to the
mixed constitution of the British Isles. English government was believed to consist
of different ‘powers ’: king, Lords, and Commons, which, many Frenchmen
believed, balanced each other. The existence of such a balance prevented each
16 Charles Cottu, Des moyens de mettre la Charte en harmonie avec la royaute (Paris, 1828) ; idem, Du seul
moyen de sortir de la crise actuelle (Paris, 1829) ; idem, Des devoirs du roi envers la royaute (Paris, 1830) ; idem,
De la necessite d’une dictature (Paris, 1830). 17 Cottu, Moyens, p. 69.18 Ibid., p. 87. 19 Ibid., pp. 82–3. 20 Ibid., pp. 71–138.21 Cottu, De la necessite, pp. 22–3.
666 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
of these powers expanding beyond their legally imposed limits, thus prohibiting
the imposition of despotism. Cottu, however, did not subscribe to the theory
of mixed government. He pointed out that the English House of Commons
could hardly be conceived as a democratic institution. In fact, he argued, the
Commons were controlled by the English aristocracy, through the system of
the rotten boroughs. Precisely this aristocratic influence, often decried as an
abuse, was responsible for the combination of liberty and stability in England. If
the House of Commons would be reformed to eliminate the influence of the
Lords, not liberty, but a bloody revolution would be the consequence.22
By invoking the English example, Cottu made a powerful argument for the
connection between (modern) liberty and aristocracy. The prestige of the English
political system, as guaranteeing a unique combination of liberty and stability,
was unparalleled during the Restoration period. Liberal thinkers, such as the
historian J. C. L. Sismondi, who was close to Benjamin Constant, saw England
as the home of ‘modern liberty ’. The example of the British constitution,
Sismondi wrote, had taught the moderns to appreciate liberty as a product of
‘peace, happiness, and domestic independence’, instead of conceiving of it
as participation of the citizens in sovereignty.23 According to a royalist such as
Cottu, the English aristocracy was the main guarantee for that liberty.
Like the electoral system, the pros and cons of a reform of the local
administration were frequently debated throughout the Restoration period. This
was in particular the case in 1828, when the centre-left government led by
Vicomte Jean-Baptiste Martignac introduced a Municipal Bill, which led to a
vigorous debate both in and outside the Chamber of Deputies. Comte Vincent
Marie Viennot de Vaublanc’s brochure Des administrations provinciales et municipales
(1828) was one of the most important royalist contributions to this debate.
Vaublanc, a committed royalist publicist and politician who had shortly served
as minister of the interior at the beginning of the Restoration period, pleaded
for a form of decentralization which would hand over power to the local
elites. While in the existing system members of the local councils were appointed
by the king, Vaublanc proposed to give local dignitaries, like the bishop, the
mayor, and military commanders, a seat in these councils by right. Moreover,
the councils would be presided over by functionaries appointed for life, who
would receive a special title (Vaublanc suggested calling them ‘great seneschal of
the province’).24
In his view, the reform of the local administration should be seen as an
opportunity to ‘ strengthen the feeble aristocracy of France’.25 This was necessary
in the interests of both liberty and stability. ‘Considerable men’ and ‘eminent
22 Ibid., pp. 32–63.23 J. C. L. Simonde de Sismondi, Histoire des republiques italiennes du moyen age (18 vols., Paris, 1815–18),
XVIII, pp. 353–406.24 Comte Vincent Marie Viennot de Vaublanc, Des administrations provinciales et municipales (Paris,
1828), pp. 42–4. 25 Ibid., p. 8.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 667
bodies ’, Vaublanc argued, were necessary as a ‘ support ’ of the monarchy.
Vaublanc placed this claim in a historical perspective : he explained that the
downfall of the monarchy in 1789 had been caused by the absence of ‘powerful
men or bodies ’. At the same time, an aristocracy was indispensable for the pres-
ervation of liberty. Aristocrats had an interest to prevent the monarchy from
degenerating into despotism, as the first desire of a despot would be to reverse
the aristocratic class, ‘ so as no longer to find an obstacle to his power ’.26 But
this claim was not just valid in a monarchy. Even a republic could not survive
without the patronage of a social elite. If, in a republic, the people were not
restrained by an aristocracy, it would inevitably degenerate into anarchy, which
in turn would bring forth a tyranny. ‘No matter what type of government one
is in, powerful men are necessary to maintain liberty ’, Vaublanc concluded.27
Or, as he repeated elsewhere: ‘The absolute equality of things and persons is the
death of the monarchy and of public liberties. ’28
Like Cottu, Vaublanc referred to the English example to support his case.
In his brochure, he drew an interesting contrast between social conditions on
both sides of the Channel. Both the French and the English, he pointed out, had
introduced an aristocratic chamber in their political system. But in England this
aristocracy was strong, because it existed not just in the Lords, but on numerous
‘ intermediary levels ’. The habits and prejudices of the English people were
‘eminently aristocratic ’. This system protected both the throne and liberty.
In France, on the contrary, the aristocracy existed only on paper. ‘Everything
that was elevated has been destroyed, to the point that nothing was left but
the strange spectacle of a monarchy composed of two elements, the nation and
the king. ’29
I I I
Institutional reforms, such as those proposed by Cottu and Vaublanc, were not
the only way to recreate an aristocracy envisaged by royalists. Throughout the
Restoration period, they campaigned for a change of the revolutionary succession
laws, a campaign that must be seen as the royalists’ most sustained effort to
recreate an aristocracy. These laws – introduced by the Civil Code and still valid
after 1814 – stipulated that, apart from the disposable portion, an inheritance
should be divided equally among legitimate children.30 Royalists believed that
these laws were responsible for the increasing division of property in France. This
undermined the profitability of agriculture, they argued. But more importantly,
royalists believed that the division of property also had a detrimental effect on
the social composition of French society. The revolutionary succession laws
26 Ibid., p. 22. 27 Ibid., p. 25. 28 Ibid., p. 45. 29 Ibid., pp. 27–9.30 Philippe Sagnac, La legislation civile de la revolution francaise (1789–1804) : essai d’histoire sociale (Paris,
1898), pp. 57–154, 330–54.
668 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
prevented the restoration of a territorial aristocracy on French soil, and therefore
left the nation without resistance against despotism.
The English example, which had played such an important role in the
argumentation of publicists such as Cottu and Vaublanc, was again invoked in
defence of primogeniture. Royalists pointed out that in England the aristocracy
was sustained by succession laws that favoured the concentration of landed
property. This was, in their view, the secret of English liberty. Maurice Rubichon,
a now forgotten publicist who enjoyed a certain renown in his own day as a
‘Christian economist ’, was the first to make this argument.31 Between 1815
and 1819, Rubichon published a two-volume book entitled De l’Angleterre, inspired
by his stay in England as an emigre. From this book, it is clear that Rubichon
believed the concentration of landed property to be the most important charac-
teristic of English society. England, he argued, was still a ‘ feudal society ’; its
economic, social, and legal framework encouraged the centralization of land
in the hands of a small number of owners. In England, the eldest son of a noble
family usually had an absolute right to his father’s property, entails were wide-
spread, and mainmorte was predominant for the property of religious corporations.
This tendency had, if anything, been encouraged during the Revolution. The
enclosures of the commons had greatly increased the concentration of landed
property, so that ‘ feudalism’ had been even more consolidated in England.32
As an economist, Rubichon was mainly interested in the effects of English
property laws on agriculture. He explained at great length how they were
responsible for England’s prosperity.33 But De l’Angleterre emphasized the political
effects of the English property laws as well. Because primogeniture and entail
favoured the concentration of property in England, the English nobility had
been able to retain its strength. There was no other country than England,
Rubichon emphasized, where the aristocracy was more powerful, and where
class barriers were more insurmountable. Far from being a democratic
society, social hierarchy was nowhere more pronounced. A deep gap existed
between the nobility and the bourgeoisie. The existence of this strong territorial
aristocracy was, in Rubichon’s view, an important guarantee for liberty.
Rubichon argued that the nobility possessed ‘a force of opinion’ against that
of the sovereign. Its influence over commoners, stemming from aristocratic
wealth, traditions, and good deeds allowed it to do so.34 This had once been
the case in France as well, as Rubichon reminded his readers. There, too,
primogeniture had created noble families, fixed always on the same land,
paternally disposed towards their inferiors, and acting as ‘ the sole barrier that
could stop the throne in the exercise of its absolute power. ’ In short, entail and
primogeniture were an important guarantee for liberty. According to Rubichon,
31 Nettement described him as having ‘un mouvement d’idees et une originalite d’esprit tres-rares ’.
Alfred Nettement, Histoire de la litterature francaise sous le gouvernement de juillet (2 vols., Paris, 1859), II,
pp. 511–12. 32 Maurice Rubichon, De l’Angleterre (2 vols., Paris, 1815–19), II, pp. 1–11.33 In the second volume of De l’Angleterre. 34 Ibid., I, pp. 220–1.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 669
‘ the whole code of other civil laws ’ was of ‘ less importance for public liberty
than the ancient laws on entail ’.35
These views were further developed by Charles Cottu in his best-selling
De l’administration de la justice criminelle en Angleterre, et de l’esprit du gouvernement anglais
(1820). This brochure had been written by Cottu after a government mission to
study the English jury system. As its title already indicates, Cottu’s book did
not limit itself to this subject, but provided reflections on the ‘spirit ’ of the English
government as well.36 Like Rubichon, Cottu believed that the English property
laws, to which he devoted his first chapter, were essential to its political system.
Property was not equally divided in England between the children of a family,
he pointed out, as was the case in France. Primogeniture was the general rule.
Even where the law admitted free choice on the part of the testator, the eldest
son was always preferred. As a result, families were attached to their property
and to their province, and the countryside was greatly embellished. The exercise
of municipal duties also attached men to their property, and landowners
resided for much of the year in the provinces. This meant that a class of land-
owners was spread throughout the whole country.
According to Cottu, the existence of such a strong, territorial aristocracy
had numerous advantages. It accounted for the superior administration of justice
in England. It assured small government : in England everything went of its
own accord, the government needed to interfere but little.37 But above all, it
made that particular combination of English liberty and stability possible. The
titles and prerogatives of the English aristocracy, Cottu emphasized, belonged
to it less as its own property, and more for the common benefit of the nation,
‘and in the sole view of creating a powerful dyke, both against the excesses of
the democratic spirit and against the encroachments of arbitrary power’.38
For this reason, instead of exciting envy and greed, Englishmen regarded noble
titles and prerogatives as necessary for the maintenance of liberty. Attainable by
everyone on basis of services and talents, they were the legitimate goal of all
ambitions.39 In short, the English example taught that one of the means to
found not just liberty but its durability was to form ‘a great body of citizens who,
receiving particular advantages from its institutions, becomes naturally interested
in defending them, defending at the same time the rights of the people resulting
from the same concession’.40
In his concluding chapter, Cottu discussed this question in more general terms,
explicitly connecting the preservation of modern liberty and the existence of an
aristocracy. The hatred against privileges that had engendered a hatred against
all social superiorities, he wrote, prevented the French from appreciating
the English system, because it had given them a mistaken conception of
35 Ibid., I, p. 191.36 Charles Cottu, De l’administration de la justice criminelle en Angleterre, et de l’esprit du gouvernement anglais
(Paris, 1822), pp. ix–x. 37 Ibid., pp. 218–32.38 Ibid., p. 18. 39 Ibid., pp. 1–19. 40 Ibid., p. 235.
670 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
liberty. The French had become convinced that liberty consisted in giving over
the administration of the state to ‘ the caprices of the multitude’. But instead,
liberty consisted in something very different. To be free was never to be submitted
to the authority of man, but solely to that of the magistrate ; to be never arrested
nor detained except according to legal rules. It was to be able profess one’s
religion without constraint ; to be allowed to censure all acts of the adminis-
tration ; never to pay arbitrary taxes ; never to be submitted to laws except
those judged necessary and just by the nation itself ; and never to be excluded
from public office or dignity by considerations of birth. For the protection of
this liberty, modern liberty – for Cottu’s definition repeated almost word for
word that of Constant,41 – the existence of an aristocracy was not an impediment
but a necessary prerequisite. Without an aristocracy, he wrote, no moderate
government, no ‘veritable liberty ’ was possible. In despotic governments such
as Turkey, or France under Napoleon, there was no need for an intermediary
level between the tyrant and the people, for the sword decided everything. In
a moderate or a free government, things were different. There, the aristocracy
was necessary to protect the people against the excesses of the prince, and
conversely to protect the monarch against the people. ‘To that extent the
aristocracy has been established in England. ’42
Both Rubichon and Cottu combined their praise of the English system with
a criticism of the effects of the revolutionary succession laws in France. The
division of landed property, preventing the restoration of a territorial aristocracy,
left the country without protection against anarchy and despotism. Rubichon
placed this problem in a historical perspective. In his view, things had started to
go wrong in France when non-noble lawyers had started to attack primogeniture
in the seventeenth century.43 Rubichon devoted many pages of his De l’Angleterre
bemoaning the destruction of the nobility, the ‘defenders of the people’, on
the Continent. The aristocracy of Europe was destroyed, ‘ that essential, funda-
mental, I would say exclusive basis of liberty ’. The future therefore looked
bleak : it would take centuries before this ‘magnificent edifice ’ could be restored
again.44 Cottu was pessimistic as well. France had no aristocracy comparable to
that of England, he pointed out at the end of his book, and even lacked the
great fortunes to make one. If the government was attacked now it would
41 To modern citizens, Constant wrote, liberty is ‘ the right to be subjected only to the laws, and to
be neither arrested, detained, put to death or maltreated in any way by the arbitrary will of one or
more individuals. It is the right of everyone to express their opinion, choose a profession and practise
it, to dispose of property, and even to abuse it ; to come and go without permission, and without having
to account for their motives or undertakings. It is everyone’s right to associate with other individuals,
either to discuss their interests, or to profess the religion which they and their associates prefer, or even
to simply occupy their days and hours in a way which is most compatible with their inclinations or
whims. Finally it is everyone’s right to exercise some influence on the administration of the govern-
ment, either by electing all or particular officials, or through representations, petitions, demands to
which authorities are more or less compelled to pay heed. ’ Constant, Political writings, pp. 310–11.42 Cottu, De l’administration, pp. 233–50. 43 Rubichon, De l’Angleterre, I, p. 180.44 Ibid., I, pp. 187–206.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 671
be obliged to seek the support of the army. The French succession laws were
therefore subversive of representative government, Cottu concluded. The
only way in which an aristocracy could be reconstituted was by reintroducing
primogeniture.45
I V
References to the English example continued to be made in the royalist campaign
for primogeniture. In the royalist journal Le Defenseur, Louis de Bonald explained
that English liberty depended on the existence of its territorial aristocracy
rather than on its democratic institutions. In his view, English liberty could not
be attributed to the fact that over half of its citizens, or their representatives,
could impose laws and taxes on the other half, and pose the law to the king
himself. That would be servitude for the minority and tyranny for the majority,
rather than liberty for all. Instead, England was free, because a strongly con-
stituted territorial property had the necessary force to serve as a ‘ last bulwark
for the monarch ’ and to save it from the ‘encroachments of the democracy’.46
In the same periodical, a long extract was published from the writings of Carl
von Haller, in which Haller defended the English succession laws as a model
to the rest of Europe. Primogeniture and entail encouraged the concentration
of large property in the hands of the same families, contrary to the spirit of
the century that wanted to divide everything. With these laws alone was the
restoration of a territorial aristocracy possible, ‘a natural nobility ’, that would
be truly useful to the state, and that was not dependent on the will of the prince
alone.47
At the same time, royalists put much emphasis on the baneful effect of
the revolutionary succession laws on the French political system. If French
society had shown itself so little resistant against the twin dangers of anarchy
and despotism, they argued, this was to a large extent the result of its levelled
condition. This argument was made by Nicolas Bergasse in his brochure Essai
sur la propriete (1821). With this brochure, Bergasse attempted to convince
the government that the noble property nationalized during the French
Revolution – the so-called biens nationaux – should be returned to their rightful
owners. As this demand was likely to cause much social unrest among the new
owners of the biens nationaux, who had been afraid that their property would
be confiscated ever since the return of the Bourbons to France, Bergasse’s
brochure was censured by the government upon its first publication in 1815,
which gave it great notoriety when it was finally published in a modified
version in 1821.
45 Cottu, De l’administration, pp. 233–50.46 Louis de Bonald, ‘Sur un passage de l’Esprit des lois ’, originally published in Le Defenseur,
reprinted in Œuvres completes (3 vols., Paris, 1859), II, pp. 875–88.47 Carl von Haller, ‘Qu’est-ce que la noblesse’, Le Defenseur, 3 (1820) pp. 30–5, 49–60.
672 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
In this context, Bergasse’s brochure is important because he connected his
arguments about the biens nationaux to a vindication of the political importance of
landed property in general and of primogeniture in particular. The latter was
necessary, he argued, for the restoration of an aristocracy and therefore of
liberty. It was ‘a truth that might surprise ’, Bergasse wrote, that without an
aristocracy, liberty was impossible in a monarchy. ‘There is no liberty in a
monarchy if all compose the same mass, the same multitude. ’ A hierarchy
was necessary that reflected the natural superiorities in society, instead of being
imposed by the government. For this reason, Bergasse added, the condition of
post-revolutionary France looked bleak. Montesquieu had described England as a
country in which liberty was threatened through a lack of ‘ intermediary bodies ’.
However, the French now had far fewer intermediary bodies than the English.
‘There is a lot of talk about liberty in France ’, Bergasse warned, ‘but I must
confess that I see nothing there but a prince, two Chambers and a multitude ; for
sure, something else is needed, not just to constitute liberty, but also to establish
the authority of the Prince on durable foundations. ’48
In 1826, the campaign for primogeniture led to the introduction of the
Succession Laws Bill by the royalist government headed by Joseph de Villele.
With this bill, primogeniture would be reintroduced in France in a mitigated
way. The government proposed to give, in case of deaths ab intestat, the disposable
portion to the eldest son. Thus, primogeniture did not become obligatory ; it could
be easily avoided if the testator indicated otherwise in his will. Moreover, the bill
did not apply to the whole legacy. The bulk of the inheritance would still
be divided equally between all of the children; only the disposable portion went
in its integrality to the eldest son. Another limitation on the reintroduction of
primogenitue was that the bill was aimed only at families with an income on
which they paid at least 300 fr. in taxes. Despite all these restrictions, the
government and its royalist supporters expected much of the bill, as became clear
in the debate in parliament and in the press. In particular, they believed that
it would contribute to stabilizing the political regime in France. Although the
bill eventually failed in face of the liberal opposition, its very existence and
the debate that it engendered show how much importance the royalists attached
to the restoration of an aristocracy in France.49
In a speech to defend the Succession Laws Bill in the Chamber of Peers,
Marc-Rene de Montalembert, a diplomat and a faithful servant of the Bourbon
dynasty, made clear that the reintroduction of primogeniture was necessary
by hammering on the pernicious aspects of the revolutionary succession
48 Nicolas Bergasse, Essai sur la propriete, ou considerations morales et politiques sur la question de savoir s’il faut
restituer aux emigres les heritages dont ils ont ete depouilles durant le cours de la revolution ; ouvrage ou il est parle de
quelques-unes des causes qui preparent la chute des etats, et surtout des etats monarchiques (Paris, 1821), pp. 43–9;
quotes pp. 48–9.49 On the Succession Laws Bill and the debate : Alfred Nettement, Histoire de la Restauration (7 vols.,
Paris, 1869), VII, pp. 284–308. A more recent, but less detailed, account: Waresquiel and Yvert, Histoire
de la Restauration, pp. 381–2.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 673
laws.50 First, Montalembert pointed out that the division of property had an
influence on the mental disposition of the nation. It encouraged ‘egoism’, the
‘dissolvant of each society ’, and prevented public spiritedness. This mental dis-
position, Montalembert argued, made a constitutional government impossible, it
encouraged servility or anarchy, despotism or a republic.51 Likewise, the division
of property encouraged centralization and bureaucratization. A legislation that
established ‘an immense quantity of small proprietors, poor, exclusively occupied
with their domestic needs ’, prevented the existence of institutions, guarantees,
limits to ministerial power. In short, it delivered the nation to the bureaucracy.
A people, ‘curbed under the exigencies of the unlimited division of property ’,
remained under the thumb of fiscal agents and salaried functionaries. ‘ If such a
people has rights, has institutions, they are a sham, because they cannot exercise
the first, nor preserve the latter. ’ In a country where there were nothing but
‘ individuals without political consistency, temporary, accidental fortunes, ephem-
eral existences without local influence ’, neither centralization nor bureaucracy
could be avoided.52
But egoism and centralization were not the only dangers resulting from the
unlimited division of property. The revolutionary succession laws, Montalembert
warned, were also the best means to establish despotism. The unlimited division
of property left the prince with the possibility to reign arbitrarily, finding no
other limit to his authority than his own will. The destruction of large territorial
property, local influences, independent existences, created a nation in which no
other ‘political notabilities ’ existed between the throne and the people than those
that depended on the court. The subdivision of large properties allowed the prince
to make his people into ‘a great and inert agglomeration of individuals, without
influence, without mutual trust, without national spirit, without means to unite or
agree, and in consequence without interest in public affairs ’.53
In the view of the royalists, the Succession Laws Bill was, in other words, a
liberal measure. Montalembert put the principle of liberty squarely central in his
defence of the bill. ‘A noble peer told you at the beginning of this discussion:
‘‘The revolution has been made to conquer equality. ’’ – I respond: the resto-
ration has come to give us our liberties, and as I am among the number of those
who prefer liberties to equality, I support everything that can consolidate our
institutions. ’54 The bill’s ‘ liberal ’ nature was emphasized as well in several
brochures and pamphlets published by royalists in 1826. In his Observations sur le
principe du droit d’aınesse et sur son application aux familles electorales, Charles Cottu
praised the bill because it would create ‘ local influences ’ to counteract the
spirit of equality. ‘Let us then conclude that the system of primogeniture is
basically favorable to liberty and to equality ; and that it is moreover one of the
50 Not to be confused with his son Charles de Montalembert, the famous Catholic activist.51 Marc-Rene de Montalembert, Archives parlementaires : recueil complet des debats legislatifs et politiques
des chambres francaises, 2ieme serie, 1800–1860, ed., J. Madival and E. Laurent (126 vols., Paris, 1867–71),
XLVI, pp. 519–20. 52 Ibid., p. 521. 53 Ibid., p. 522. 54 Ibid., p. 519.
674 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
necessities of representative government. ’55 Likewise, in Du partage egal et du droit
d’aınesse, J.-J. Brehier argued that the goal of the bill was not to concentrate
France in the hands of a few, but to impede the dissolution of landed fortunes.
‘Thus will form itself the likeness of a local aristocracy, numerous, spread over
the whole territory of France. That is the only guarantee of order ; that is the
only hope of liberty. ’56
V
An analysis of royalist pamphlets and speeches shows how important
aristocratic liberalism was in the political debates of the Restoration period.
Royalists argued that an aristocracy, as a support for the monarch, played a
crucial role in the maintenance of stability. But most importantly, an aristocratic
class was indispensable for the preservation of liberty – directly, by checking
abuses, and, indirectly, by preserving the government from anarchy. The English
political system, which was seen as the most liberal in Europe, and which was
based on the existence of a powerful aristocracy, illustrated this argument to
perfection.57 Conversely, royalists argued that a levelled society such as post-
revolutionary France offered but little protection against the danger of despotism.
What was the liberal response to this discourse? On first sight, Restoration
liberals might seem to have agreed with the royalists in their positive evaluation
of the role of the aristocracy. During the constitutional debates in the begin-
ning of the Restoration period, a number of liberal publicists pleaded for the
introduction of an aristocratic hereditary institution modelled on the English
House of Lords. As is well known, Germaine de Stael, whose political treatises
had an important influence on liberals of a younger generation, was a great
admirer of the English political system. In her influential Considerations sur la
revolution francaise (1818), part memoir, part political brochure, Stael held the
English model up as an example to the French. From her account, it is clear
that she believed that the existence of an aristocratic body was a necessary
element in this model.58 Likewise, Stael’s friend and collaborator Benjamin
Constant pleaded during the constitutional debates of 1814–15 for the creation of
a hereditary institution in the French political system, which would be capable
of checking royal power, and it was partly through his support that a hereditary
55 Charles Cottu, Observations sur le principe du droit d’aınesse et sur son application aux familles electorales
(Paris, 1826), p. 20.56 J.-J. Brehier, Du partage egal et du droit d’aınesse, dans leurs rapports avec nos institutions et l’etat de la societe
en France (Paris, 1826), p. 95.57 Although J. R. Jennings claims that royalists were hostile to the English political model :
‘Conceptions of England and its constitution in nineteenth-century French political thought’,Historical
Journal, 29 (1986), pp. 65–85.58 On the importance of Stael’s text : Ezio Cappadocia, ‘The liberals and Mme de Stael in 1818’, in
Richard Herr and Harold T. Parker, eds., Ideas in history : essays presented to Louis Gottschalk, by his former
students (Durham, 1965).
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 675
Chamber of Peers was created which shared legislative power with the king
and the elective Chamber of Deputies.59
After 1815, however, the liberals’ initial enthusiasm for the English model
rapidly waned. While pro-aristocratic attitudes became identified with the
royalist party, their liberal opponents became ever more criticial of aristocratic
liberalism. In 1818, Constant wrote a disparaging account of the English situation
in La Minerve francaise, in which he argued that the English model did not
warrant an identification between liberty and aristocracy. Constant described
England as ‘a vast, opulent and vigorous aristocracy’. Immense possessions
were united in the same hands, colossal wealth accumulated on the same heads.
Great landowners could dispose of a numerous and faithful clientele, who
usually voted as told by their social superiors. As a result, the national represen-
tation was composed for one part of salaried officials, and for the other part
of those appointed by the aristocracy. This system, far from being the secret of
England’s liberty, was ‘oppressive in theory ’, and it was softened only by the
inheritance of 1688 and by certain elements specific to England, which, Constant
emphasized, made its constitution inapplicable to other people.60
On the other hand, however (and this was the more important argument),
Constant became convinced that the restoration of a (territorial) aristocracy was
not just undesirable, but simply impossible in France. Modern times, he came
to think, were characterized by a progress towards equality, both in moral
and economic terms. For this reason, he publicly retracted his support for the
Chamber of Peers in hisMemoires sur les Cent-Jours of 1820. He had come to realize,
he wrote, that the ‘national disposition’ was in favour of ‘an almost absolute
equality ’. Likewise, the social structure, characterized by the division of proper-
ties, by the ever increasing influence of commerce, industry, and capital, made
the restoration of a landed nobility well-nigh impossible. In these circumstances,
a hereditary peerage representing nothing but the great landowners had some-
thing contrary to nature. ‘The peerage, when it exists, can subsist ’, he wrote,
‘which is obvious by the fact that we have one; but if it did not exist, I would
believe it to be impossible. ’61
In short, in Constant’s view, the royalists’ aristocratic liberalism was
problematic because it was not just mistaken in theory but above all because
it was anachronistic. France had become a ‘democratic ’, levelled society and
that process could not be reversed. Attempts of the royalists to safeguard the
monarchy from despotism by restoring a territorial nobility were inspired by
an obsolete political model. Constant criticized the royalists, in other words,
in much the same way as he criticized the attempts undertaken by the
59 Constant, Political writings, pp. 198–200.60 Benjamin Constant, ‘De la puissance de l’Angleterre durant la guerre, et de sa detresse a la paix,
jusqu’en 1818’, first published in La Minerve francaise in 1818, reprinted in Constant’sMelanges de litterature
et de politique (2 vols., Louvain, 1830), I, pp. 19–31.61 Benjamin Constant, Memoires sur les Cent-Jours, ed., O. Pozzo di Borgo (Paris, 1961), p. 156.
676 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
Jacobins during the Revolution to impose on France a government modelled
on the ancient republics. This parallellism between Constant’s critique on the
royalists and on the Jacobins is clear in particular in his De la liberte des anciens
comparee a celle des modernes. The representative government was ‘ the only one
in the shelter of which we can find some peace today ’, he stressed at the
beginning of his text. Both the ‘Lacedaemonian republic ’, and the ‘regime of
the Gauls, which quite resembled the one that a certain party would like to
restore to us ’, were political models of the past, that were unsuitable for
modern nations.62
The charge of anachronism was put forward by other Restoration liberals as
well. The anti-modern character of the royalist campaign for the restoration of
an aristocracy was emphasized by the liberal economist Charles Ganilh. In his
brochure De la contre-revolution en France ou de la restauration de l’ancienne noblesse et des
anciennes superiorites sociales dans la France nouvelle, Ganilh argued that the restoration
of an aristocracy – the goal of the counter-revolution – had become impossible
in France. In modern times, Ganilh wrote, the accumulation of wealth derived
from the labour of the entire population ; its circulation in all classes was en-
couraged by the arts and sciences. ‘That movement is so general, so universal, so
unanimous, that it reverses all social barriers, levels all ranks and confounds all
classifications. ’63 To reverse it would have fateful consequences. The only way
to restore an aristocracy would be to abolish modern wealth. To do that, the
French people would have to be isolated from the rest of the world, and France’s
various departments from each other. Means of communication would have to
be abolished. In short, Ganilh concluded, the modern commercial-industrial
economic system was incompatible with ‘ the monarchical system with its
privileges and corporations ’.64
During the debate about the Succession Laws Bill, liberal opponents of the
bill likewise argued repeatedly that the reintroduction of primogeniture in France
would be an attack on modern society, an attempt to turn back the clock. During
the debate on the bill in the Chamber of Peers, Comte Louis-Matthieu de Mole
objected against the bill that equality was made necessary by the ‘present state of
civilization’.65 Baron Etienne Pasquier, a former government minister, argued
that the bill was made impossible by the current ‘social condition’.66 Particularly
illuminating was the speech by Duc Victor de Broglie, one of the most important
liberal leaders in the Peers. The goal of the bill, Broglie pointed out, was to
reintroduce primogeniture. This was the source of all inequality, it was pure
privilege. It was an attempt to create a special class, to introduce inequality
everywhere. It was an attempt to destroy the free market. But above all, it was
an attempt to recreate a class that had been destroyed by the Revolution. ‘What
62 Constant, Political writings, p. 310; see Holmes’s remarks on this issue in Benjamin Constant, p. 37.63 Charles Ganilh, De la contre-revolution en France ou de la restauration de l’ancienne noblesse et des anciennes
superiorites sociales dans la France nouvelle (Paris, 1823), p. 233. 64 Ibid., p. 238.65 Mole, Archives parlementaires, XLVI, p. 443. 66 Pasquier, Archives parlementaires, XLVI, pp. 474–91.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 677
is attempted, is to create an intermediary aristocracy, a sort of nobility en petit pied. ’
In other words, ‘what is here prepared, is a social and political revolution, a
revolution against the revolution that has been made in France almost forty
years ago’.67
But liberals did not just contend themselves with brandishing the royalists’
political model as anachronistic. They put alternatives forward as well. Thus,
Constant’s defence of the representative system – and therefore of a modified
form of political liberty – as ‘ the only one in the shelter of which we could
find some freedom or peace today ’, must be understood as much as a response
to the royalists ’ aristocratic liberalism, as to the Jacobin’s republicanism.68
Other liberals likewise upheld the representative government as an alternative
to both Jacobinism and aristocratic liberalism. In 1815, the influential liberal
journal Le Censeur criticized what it described as ‘Montesquieu’s doctrine ’ that
the nobility was necessary in the protection of liberty. Although this might be
true in theory, it was no longer so in practice. Aristocracy was an irrational
prejudice, and as such it could not resist the progress of enlightenment. Today,
the aristocracy could appeal to no prejudice to legitimate its pre-eminence over
other classes. It could therefore no longer function as a barrier. This was perhaps
the reason, Le Censeur suggested, that European nations were turning towards
representative governments instead.69
But this was not the reaction of all liberals. Some believed that, even if royalists
were wrong to defend the aristocracy, their conception of liberty was valid.
Charles Bailleul, who was certainly not a reactionary thinker – he was a former
member of the Convention – is an interesting witness to the liberal ambiguity
vis-a-vis the royalist argument. As any other liberal, Bailleul resolutely opposed
the restoration of primogeniture in his Du projet de loi sur les successions et sur les
substitutions. Nevertheless, in this brochure, he expressed concerns about the
equalized condition of France that were very similar to those of the royalists.
The French Revolution had destroyed all intermediary bodies in France. Thus,
the king faced the nation, a multitude of isolated individuals, while there were
no barriers to counteract the ministers if they had bad designs. This situation
was problematic : ‘ I confess that the more I contemplate the condition of things ’,
Bailleul wrote,
the more I worry about that isolation, that mobility, which delivers all to power, and
moreover delivers power to itself, because it can be reduced to one single agent, that
encounters nowhere any resistance, no check, no necessary council, nothing even that
obliges it to take the lessons of time into account. I see nothing fixed in that. In such a
67 Broglie, Archives parlementaires, XLVI, p. 621.68 Constant, Political writings, p. 309. A similar argument is made by Holmes, Benjamin Constant,
pp. 28–52. It should be noted, however, that Helena Rosenblatt attributes Constant’s emphasis on
public spiritedness to an intra-liberal quarrel rather than to his reaction against the royalists’ aristo-
cratic liberalism. Rosenblatt, ‘Re-evaluating Benjamin Constant’s liberalism: industrialism, Saint-
Simonianism and the Restoration years ’, History of European Ideas, 30 (2004), pp. 23–37.69 Le Censeur, 2 (1815), pp. 145–55.
678 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
condition of things, one will pass alternatively, and non-interruptedly, from despotism into
anarchy, and from anarchy into despotism.70
Bailleul realized that this analysis was close to the royalists’ (if they argued
that one metre counted hundred centimetres, he pointed out, one could hardly
disagree with them). But he believed that they were mistaken to conclude from
this that a return to the institutions of the Old Regime was necessary. Under
the Old Regime, power had been limited by many obstacles, but they were all
based on usurpation. Moreover, it was impossible to change society back to its
old form. Bailleul, therefore, proposed an alternative to the reintroduction of
primogeniture. Instead of a territorial aristocracy, he felt that it was necessary to
create a series of ‘High Councils ’ of ‘doctrine and discipline ’, which would
be ‘ the eyes and ears of the crown and the people ’. Each High Council would
be composed of members appointed for life, and have a moderator called ‘duke ’.
These ‘great intermediary bodies ’ would fill ‘ the emptiness that is between
the throne and the nation’ – again, Bailleul echoed the royalist discourse
here – and thus preserved the monarchy from ‘anarchy and despotism’.71
V I
After the July Revolution of 1830, the liberal discourse, the idea that French
society was on an irreversible track towards equality, became the dominant
way of thinking about politics. By bringing liberals to power, the July Revolution
gave them the opportunity to turn this view into an officially accepted way of
thinking. Moreover, the events of 1830, interpreted as another bourgeois victory
over an aristocratic regime, confirmed the myth of a progressive development
towards equality in and of themselves. As the Catholic historian and political
thinker Louis de Carne pointed out in 1838: ‘For twenty years it has been
repeated that democracy was on the rise, and the July Revolution seems to have
given that maxim a manifest confirmation. ’72 From this perspective, the royalist
attempts to restore a (territorial) aristocracy in France seemed hopelessly
anachronistic. Although Carne was not unsympathetic to the royalist cause, in
his Vues sur l’histoire contemporaine (1833), he judged their attempts to restore
primogeniture in 1826 as completely misguided. Moreover, he indicated that
royalists themselves had modified their political views after 1830. Now, he
commented, even the royalists accepted the inevitable domination of democratic
interests.73
But aristocratic liberalism, even if it was transformed, did not disappear
after 1830. Many post-Restoration liberals agreed with Bailleul that the royalist
70 Charles Bailleul, Du projet de loi sur les successions et sur les substitutions, pour comparaison, quelques idees sur
des institutions appropriees a l’ordre de choses qui nous regit, et qui en seraient les garanties et les appuis (Paris, 1826),
p. 37. 71 Ibid., p. 39.72 Louis de Carne, Des interets nouveaux en Europe depuis la revolution de 1830 (Paris, 1838), p. 96.73 Louis de Carne, Vues sur l’histoire contemporaine (2 vols., Paris, 1833), I, pp. 211–43, II, p. 65.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 679
concerns about the levelling of French society were not without grounds ; that
the absence of intermediary powers was indeed a danger for liberty. Although
they did not believe that the restoration of a (territorial) aristocracy was possible,
they did argue that a measure of social and institutional reform was necessary
to make France safe from despotism. This theme could take many different
shapes. Some liberals advocated, like Bailleul, the creation of a ‘new’ aristocracy,
more adapted to the needs and characteristics of modern France.74 But argu-
ments borrowed from the royalist discourse were used as well to plead for
very different reforms, such as decentralization, or a greater liberty of the press
(as a means to create a strong public opinion). It is only when the discourse used
to legitimate these proposals is taken into account that the importance of the
royalist bequest to nineteenth-century liberalism becomes clear.
An obvious example of this royalist bequest can be found in the writings of
Alexis de Tocqueville, who was himself a member of an old noble family and
who had many connections with the royalist party through his friends and
relatives.75 In his De la democratie en Amerique (1835–40), Tocqueville maintained
that a condition of social equality, while being the most characteristic trait of
modern society, was at the same time an important threat to liberty. In aristo-
cratic societies, Tocqueville argued, liberty was protected by ‘secondary powers ’
between sovereign and subjects.76 But this limitation of central government
did not come naturally to a ‘democratic ’ people. Democratic societies ‘ tended
towards a unique and central power ’, because they had no individuals and
families that were influential and powerful in their own right.77 The democratic
condition of society, Tocqueville warned, was therefore favourable to ‘despot-
ism’; a despotism that was not oppressive or tyrannical in a violent way, but
that aimed to have total control over the citizens’ lives. The restoration of an
aristocracy was not a possible solution to this problem, Toqueville argued.
Instead, he put his hopes on decentralization. By association, simple citizens
could form ‘aristocratic persons ’, as Tocquville expressed it, which, like real
aristocrats, could not be oppressed easily or in secret.78
A similar analysis can be found in the writings of other liberals, less close to
the royalist milieu than Tocqueville. Charles Dupont-White, a member of the
liberal opposition against Napoleon III, provided a discussion of the concept of
liberty along royalist lines in his De la liberte politique consideree dans ses rapports avec
l’administration locale (1864).79 Dupont-White started out from the observation
that freedom was impossible when there were only individuals vis-a-vis the
74 See Lucien Jaume, L’individu efface ou le paradoxe du liberalisme francais (Paris, 1997), pp. 288–320.75 A. Jardin’s Alexis de Tocqueville (Paris, 1984) provides the most complete information on
Tocqueville’s life.76 Alexis de Tocqueville, De la democratie en Amerique, ed. Eduard Nolla (2 vols., Paris, 1990), II,
pp. 240–2. 77 Ibid., pp. 242–5. 78 Ibid., pp. 271–8.79 On Dupont-White’s life and œuvre: Sudhir Hazareesingh, ‘A Jacobin, liberal, socialist, and
republican synthesis : the original political thought of Charles Dupont-White (1807–1878) ’, History of
European Ideas, 23 (1997), pp. 145–71.
680 A N N E L I E N D E D I J N
state. It was necessary to create ‘ intermediary bodies ’ in between the state
and individuals, with life and independence, to temper the power of central
government. Liberty could only be protected when there were several powers
in the nation to defend itself against central government. This view, Dupont-
White pointed out, was widely prevalent amongst the French. He explained this
as an inheritance of the monarchical past, in which the executive power always
had great force. Like Tocqueville, Dupont-White did not believe that the aris-
tocracy could be restored to solve this problem. But neither did he believe that
decentralization was a good alternative. Instead, he suggested that ‘opinion’, ‘ the
accordance of minds (esprits) on everything that interests men’, was the most
suitable barrier against despotism in a modern society such as France. In his view,
the levelling of society was therefore less problematic than it had been to
Tocqueville, because modernization had brought the rise of public opinion,
a ‘new power ’ that modern nations could use to defend their rights.80
Tocqueville’s and Dupont-White’s references to the importance of inter-
mediary bodies were not isolated remarks. Arguments borrowed from the
royalist discourse were widely prevalent in the liberal opposition against the
centralizing, ‘despotic ’ tendencies of the July Monarchy. After the February
Revolution of 1848 and the subsequent imposition of a new imperial dictatorship
in 1852, the resonance of aristocratic liberalism became even more pronounced
in the liberal discourse. Both the liberal analysis of the problems confronting
French society – its levelled condition – and the solutions proposed – the rec-
reation of intermediary powers – were clearly inspired by the royalist discourse
of the Restoration period. The conviction that intermediary powers, a source of
influence independent from the government, needed to be restored became
a liberal obsession.81 Constant’s attempt to link ‘modern’ liberty firmly to
‘political ’ liberty or self-government was, in other words, not wholly successful.
The rival conception of liberty developed by the royalists – liberty guaranteed
by intermediary powers – remained as least as important in nineteenth-century
liberalism.
80 Charles Dupont-White, De la liberte politique consideree dans ses rapports avec l’administration locale
(Paris, 1864), pp. 1–7.81 Lucien Jaume discusses arguments of this type in his L’individu efface, pp. 288–320.
A R I S T O C R A T I C L I B E R A L I S M 681
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